Re: Danish UFO Files Now Open To Public

From: Franklin Fields <fields.nul>
Date: Fri, 6 Feb 2009 14:12:07 -0500 (EST)
Archived: Fri, 06 Feb 2009 14:29:46 -0500
Subject: Re: Danish UFO Files Now Open To Public
>From: Don Ledger <dledger.nul>>To: post.nul>Date: Fri, 06 Feb 2009 14:05:17 -0400>Subject: Re: Danish UFO Files Now Open To Public>UFO UpDates - Toronto posted:>>Source: IceNews - Reykjavik, Iceland>>http://tinyurl.com/cmx7wb>>Feb 6, 2009>>Danish UFO Files Now Open To Public>>By Luna Finnsson>>The top secret UFO files compiled by Denmark's Air Force over>>the past 30 years have finally been declassified and opened to>>public perusal. Some 15,000 reported UFO sightings are detailed>>in the files, offering plenty for UFO buffs to drool over. The>>Danish government decided to release the files because they felt>>"there was nothing secret in the files".
<snip>
>One wonders why the Danish Air Force kept 30 years of UFO>sightings under wraps for the last 30 years if as they stated,>'there was nothing secret in the files'.>According to Luna Finnsson we 'UFO buffs' will now 'drool' over>them. The Danish Air Force revitalized that old saw about lack>of details did not allow identification stating "...most of the>sightings remained 'unidentified' because the details were not>precise enough.">If we had more details we could solve them? So could we. One>wonders though if the answer came up intelligently controlled,>extra-terrestrial... would they say so?>And then there is the standard.'and UFOs are not a known>threat'. To my mind keeping the files out of public view is>partnered with the inane statement that UFOs are not a known>threat. The two equal embarrassed recognition of the fact that>the Danish Air Force and those of the US, Canada and the UK can't>do a damn thing about these invasions of their air space.>In other words, they can't guarantee their own air spaces free>of other than their own or sanctioned aircraft in that airspace.
I agree Don and would add that a declassification of files does
not mean that _all_ files have now been released.
It is possible that some files still remain classified. How
would we know if the government has a 'neither confirm or deny'
policy?
Frank